| | Reverend James Cleveland I Stood On The Banks Of Jordan CD Reverend James Cleveland Discography of CDs
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Some of his finest live in-church sides. ~ Opal Louis Nations
Includes liner notes by Fred Mendelsohn.
Full performer name: Rev. James Cleveland & The Angelic Choir. I Stood On The Banks Of Jordan Music Reverend James Cleveland I Stood On The Banks Of Jordan Songs I Stood On The Banks Of Jordan Music Review Purchase I Stood On The Banks Of Jordan CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Donald Lawrence Featuring The Tri-City Singers Hello Christmas CD (1997)
I Stood On The Banks Of Jordan album
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| | Reverend James Cleveland 20th Anniversary Album: Rev. James Cleveland Sings With The World's Greatest Choirs (Vol. 1) CD (1980)
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| | Reverend James Cleveland Best Of Rev. James Cleveland & Gmwa CD (1993)
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| | Reverend James Cleveland Peace Be Still CD (1962)
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| | Reverend James Cleveland Jesus Is The Best Thing That Ever Happened To Me CD (2001)
I Stood On The Banks Of Jordan album
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| | Reverend James Cleveland Presents The World's Greatest CD (2001)
I Stood On The Banks Of Jordan CD music
$14.25 Personnel: James Cleveland (vocals).
| | City Of God: Music From The Motion Picture CD (2003) Original Soundtrack
I Stood On The Banks Of Jordan music CDs
$16.29 In Brazil's poverty stricken City of God, crime is a way of life. Parents are dead, locked up, or otherwise engaged. As in Oliver Twist -- one of this thrilling epic's many unlikely influences -- the children of the slums take their cues from whatever parental surrogates they can find. No, not the cops or local ...
| | Force MD's Love Letters CD (1984)
I Stood On The Banks Of Jordan songs
$10.19 The debut album from this quintet offered a mix of R&B, hip-hop, dance, and an excellent vocal presentation. "Let Me Love You" and "Forgive Me Girl" were two of the four singles released from this album. Both ...
| | Okham's Razor Two's A Perfect Number CD (2004)
I Stood On The Banks Of Jordan album
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| | Experience The 80'S CD (2006) (Import)
I Stood On The Banks Of Jordan CD music
$19.69
| | Walter Jackson Welcome Home: The Okeh Recordings, Vol. 2 CD (2006)
I Stood On The Banks Of Jordan music CDs
$14.55 The second of three volumes surveying Walter Jackson's entire catalog of Columbia Records masters is essentially an expanded version of his 1965 LP, Welcome Home. In addition to including all 12 of the songs from that album, it adds seven other tracks, four of them taken from 1965-1967 singles, three of them previously unreleased. The Welcome Home album, like a lot of other soul and pop LPs from the era, was a somewhat schizophrenic affair. On the one (and better) hand, it had some of the smooth, lushly arranged soul-pop for which Jackson was most renowned, including the Top Twenty R&B hits "Welcome Home" (written by a young Chip Taylor) and "Suddenly I'm All Alone" (penned by a young Van McCoy). Another McCoy song, the yearning, majestically melodic "The Magic's Gone," is as strong as anything Jackson recorded, and "Still at the Mercy of Your Love" (co-written by McCoy) is a good if less striking orchestrated ballad. Yet on the rest of the Welcome Home album, Jackson seemed to be trying to prove he was an all-around entertainer, tackling standards like "My Funny Valentine," "Moon River," and "Fly Me to the Moon (In Other Words)," as well as more ill-advised covers of Bob Dylan's "Blowin' in the Wind" and Pete Seeger's "Where Have All the Flowers Gone." The standards -- on which Jackson sounds like a cross between Johnny Mathis and Billy Paul (who seems like he could quite possibly have been influenced by Jackson) -- actually do have their good points, but it's the soul stuff with which Jackson seems most comfortable. Fortunately, with the exception of a previously unissued cover of Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein II's "The Folks Who Live on the Hill," the seven non-LP tracks avoided pop standards. Those additional cuts, however, are still often pretty elaborately arranged even by sweet soul-pop standards, including a previously unreleased version of Randy Newman's "I Think It's Going to Rain Today." More satisfying is the 1965 B-side "Special Love," which is much more in the mainstream of sub-Curtis Mayfield Chicago soul, and the 1966 single "One Heart Lonely," which is brassier and more uptempo (to good effect) than Jackson's ...
| | Florida Funk: 1968-1975 CD (2007) Bonus Track
I Stood On The Banks Of Jordan songs
$13.15 The third in Jazzman's reissue series collecting rare and forgotten funk treasures from the late '60s and early '70s (the first two covered the Midwest and Texas funk scenes), Florida Funk shows that the Alligator State was also clearly in the groove of it. Fueled by Florida's active club scene and released on vibrant but distributionally-challenged small independent labels, none of the singles gathered here was ever anything more than a regional hit back in the day, but many of them have since become highly sought after by collectors and DJs looking for thick backbeats to sample. And thick is the word here, as grooves as wide as a mangrove swamp and every bit as deep follow here track after track, and it's a wonder Florida wasn't stomped into the ocean with the ...
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